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The Heart of the Universe

The Creation Sabbath film for 2018 is The Heart of the Universe. This film uses CGI to cover the central elements from beginning to end of the Great Controversy that rages on our earth between Christ and Satan. And it does this in just six and a half minutes. The Heart of the Universe is designed for showing in churches and sharing on social media. It was produced by Dr. Noemi Duran, Geoscience Research Institute European Office Director, and Daniel López, a Swiss media producer based in Spain.

The Heart of the Universe is available in multiple languages, and virtual environments created for each day of creation can be explored using a computer, smartphone or virtual reality glasses by going to:

Seeking Understanding

Ariel Roth has dedicated his life to understanding Earth history. This documentary – with spectacular videography of the Grand Canyon and also featuring material from his time under water in the Hydrolab investigating coral growth – explores some of the conclusions drawn from Dr. Roth’s lifetime of experience.

This is my Father’s World

The Seventh-day Adventist Church is holding Creation Sabbath on October 22, 2016. This video was created by Dan Weber, Director of Communication for the Adventist Church in North America, using footage he recorded during the course of his travels over several years. “This Is My Father’s World” was arranged by Diane Bish and James Bingham; it is performed by the Columbia Collegiate Chorale and the New England Youth Ensemble.
Please use this short film to foster worship in churches, personal meditation on the creation or for any other purpose that draws us to remember the Creator God of the Bible on this special Sabbath

The Creation: The Earth is a Witness

Watch “The Creation: The Earth is a Witness,” a day-by-day account of the biblical creation week, beginning with darkness before God created light and ending with Moses, the author of the Genesis account of creation, and his son, worshipping God on the seventh-day Sabbath. Seventh-day Adventist filmmaker Henry Stober spent four years filming the movie around the world.